This book is dedicated to the betrayed and to the
girls of Derby, Blackpool, Rochdale, Rotherham, Oxford et cetera.

A selection of comments received. Be the first to review the book buy yours from The Memoir Club.

Jennifer Coram The people who looked the other way should be made to pay, for their part of this terrible betrayal

Carol ForresterNever watched anything so awful this could have been stopped years ago by every department including the police this is were political correctness has gone mad goodness knows what would the response been if it was an Asian girl

Teresa TaylorThe trouble is this PC rubbish that prevents people telling the truth for fear of being branded as racist!

Mandy HughesEvery one who looked the other way need to serve jail time and the abusers need to be stripped of all their asessts and then deported if they were not born here.

Maggie PearsThose monsters come from all walks of life and those who know about it and don't do out about it are just as bad as them it doesn't matter if they are white black yellow red or pink men or woman these ppl are evil and need to be locked away for the safety of children

Wendy PaxtonAnd I hate to add that I blame Thatcher for being more interested in how much money folk from the ex colonies were bringing in than Who they were! I was living in a community that was mostly of Pakistani origins at the time

Ann SivitterI always said the Asian taxi drivers in Rotherham were a law unto themselves. They parked where they liked ignored the rules everyone else had to obey. I had a taxi once and the driver was asking about my house and if I was married,

Philip MoorhouseAll government departments, the police, everyone, were indoctrinated and brainwashed with totally ridiculous and over the top DIVERSITY training , I remember going into the library of a public service to find a man in African national dress

David WattsI believe this is only a tip of the iceberg and is still going on

Paul EllisYou can be sure it's going on in most towns and cities but too much paperwork and over stretched police force need bobbies walking the streets of these ghettos it's a case of wake up Britain !!!

Jean Rio AldersonPoor people don't matter in this country. The authorities knew what was going on and turned a blind eye.

Someone should be held to account.

Sheila FroomSo pleased its. All come out in the open. The young girls should Sui and then the people should be brought. To. Justice. And sacked. While the paedophiles Deported.

Jeni HattonPart of the problem is a mindset which forgets that there is an age of consent (16) and that it isn't legally possible for a person under that age to give consent. The assumption that these girls were feral lolitas left this out of the equation. Even if they hadn't been traumatised the crime should still have been investigated.

Kevin CooneyThis needs to be exposed to the whole world . Utterly shocking , the British Government & Police sat back & done nothing & it's I believe still going on ?

Sheila ElsworthThey were the criminals but the British justice system let them get away with it for years. The police knew about this for years and did nothing. They are also guilty

Brenda KjolsenIt makes my blood boil how the powers that be tried to hush this all up. It's PC gone to the extreme and it's still going on NOW. Young girl gang raped by refugees in Sunderland. DNA from at least 2 of them found and it's all hushed up. Why?

If you are a parent then there are some things that scare you
more than others. Someone else hurting your children is pretty high up that
list.

The details emerging from Rotherham over the last few months
about the systematic abuse of young girls are truly the stuff of parental
nightmare. But it’s all made worse because it now seems that for over ten years
those charged with protecting children and young girls failed. In fact, worst
of all, they decided to look the other way!

They made a choice; protect children in the face of
overwhelming evidence of sexual abuse and cruelty or worry more about some
misconceived notion of ‘cultural sensitivities’; as if there is any culture
where rape is acceptable.

They chose the latter.

It is important to say that The Times has led the way in exposing both the abuse and the cover-up.
And some of the details that they have uncovered from confidential reports are
some of the most shocking that you can imagine. The documents revealed by The Times give details of events over
the years for which no one was prosecuted such as:

·fifty-four Rotherham children were linked to
sexual exploitation by three brothers from one British Pakistani family, 18
identifying one brother as their “boyfriend” and several allegedly made
pregnant by him;

·a 14-year-old girl from a loving, supportive
family was allegedly held in a flat and forced to perform sex acts on five men,
four of them Pakistani, plus a 32-year-old Iraqi Kurd. She gave a filmed police
interview and identified her abusers;

·one girl, 15, spent days in hospital after a
broken bottle was allegedly forced inside her by two young British Pakistani
men in a park, causing her to bleed extensively;

·a 13-year-old girl was found at 3am with
disrupted clothing in a house with a large group of Asian men who had fed her
vodka. A neighbour reported the girl’s screams. Police arrested the child for
being drunk and disorderly but did not question the men.

But the police and local authorities knew – and did nothing!

As The
Times says:

“A 2010 confidential report by the police intelligence
bureau warning that thousands of such crimes were committed in the county each
year.

It contains explosive details about the men responsible for
the most serious, co-ordinated abuse. ‘Possibly the most shocking threat is the
existence of substantial and organised offender networks that groom and exploit
victims on a worrying scale,’ the report says.

‘Practitioners throughout the force state that there is a
problem with networks of Asian offenders both locally and nationally. This was
particularly stressed in Sheffield, and even more so in Rotherham where there
appears to be a significant problem with networks of Asian males exploiting
young white females. ‘Such groups are said to have trafficked South Yorkshire
child victims’ to many other cities including Bristol, Manchester, Birmingham,
Bradford and Dover”.

But nothing was done; why? Well, in
2010 the Rotherham Safeguarding Children Board produced another report. The
board is made up of senior representatives from local schools, social services,
voluntary sector and the police. Now remember that no one has been prosecuted
but enough was clearly known and there were enough concerns for a report to be
commissioned into what had been going on, in fact is still going on. They
helpfully noted that the crimes (presumably they meant alleged) had:

“cultural characteristics … which are locally sensitive in
terms of diversity.”

And for the avoidance of doubt as to where priorities lay:

“There are sensitivities of ethnicity with potential to
endanger the harmony of community relationships. Great care will be taken in
drafting … this report to ensure that its findings embrace Rotherham’s
qualities of diversity. It is imperative that suggestions of a wider cultural
phenomenon are avoided.

in May 2012, under newspaper headlines such as Men who helped themselves to easy meat
and Why did no one listen to teenage
victims of sex gang?7,it was reported that Shabir
Ahmed,8.1 Mohammed Amin,8.2 Abdul Aziz,8.3 Adil
Khan,8.4 Kabeer Hassan,8.5 Abdul Qayyum,8.6 Abdul
Rauf,8.7 Mohammed Sajid,8.8 and Hamid Safi,8.9 had
been convicted of one or more of rape, arranging and/or inciting child
prostitution, allowing premises to be used therefor, sexual activity with a
child and trafficking;

in 2012, from Telford or thereabouts, Ahdel Ali
and his brother Mubarek, Tanveer Ahmed, Mohammed Ali Sultan, Mohammed Islam
Choudrey and Mohammed Younis were convicted of one or more of sexual activity
with a child, controlling child prostitution, inciting child prostitution,
inciting a child to engage in sexual activity, meeting a child after sexual
grooming, and trafficking a child within the UK for sexual exploitation;

in 2012, from Keighley and Halifax, Bilal
Hussain and Shazad Rehman were convicted of raping two girls and assaulting
others. Their modus operandi was to drug and then rape young girls after
cruising the streets looking for ‘fresh meat’: one victim, a fourteen-year-old,
said, ‘The choice was either have sex with both or get beaten up’;

in May 2012, Azad Miah from Bangladesh, of The
Spice of India in Carlisle, was jailed for fifteen years having been found
guilty on ten of eighteen charges – paying for the sexual services of a child,
child prostitution and keeping a brothel (mainly ‘staffed’ by teenagers. A
twelve-year-old had complained to the police three times about Miah before giving
up, as nothing was done). Three years later Azad’s brother, Ata, of The Indigo
in Carlisle, was jailed for a year for harassment: according to one of Azad’s
victims, Ata had pulled up in his car beside the victim, saying he was ‘keeping
an eye on her’ as she had ‘put the boss away’;

in February 2013, Hamza Ali, Surin Uddin and
Mohamed Sheikh were convicted of taking a thirteen-year-old from a bus stop in
London to a house in Ipswich where she was treated ‘like a piece of meat’ for
four days;

in May 2013, Bassan and Mohammed Karrar, Akthar
and Anjum Dogar, Kamar Jamil, Zeesham Ahmed and Assad Hussain collected,
between the seven of them, nineteen convictions for rape; ten convictions for
conspiracy to rape; five convictions for rape of a child under thirteen; four
convictions for conspiracy to rape a child under thirteen; eight convictions
for arranging or facilitating prostitution; five convictions for trafficking
for sexual exploitation; four convictions for sexual activity with a child; and
one conviction for each of conspiracy to commit a sexual assault of a child,
sexual assault of a child under thirteen by penetration, using an instrument to
procure a miscarriage and supplying a class-A drug. This was the result of Operation
Bullfinch.

Nearly two
years later, Oxfordshire Safeguarding Children Board (OSCB) issued its 114-page
(plus appendices) Serious Case Review in
to Child Sexual Exploitation in Oxfordshire: from the experiences of Children
A, B, C, D, E, and F. Part of its paragraph 2.6 is:

Adding cases where there was some
certainty to those where there was a formal conviction of offences against
them, there are grounds for believing that over the last 15 years around 370
girls may have been exploited in the ways covered by this SCR.

And three entire
paragraphs of that Review are:

1.29 Terminology around ethnicity:
The perpetrators in this case were predominately of Pakistani heritage. (Five
were of Pakistani and one of North African heritage and the other said he was
born in Saudi Arabia.) In this report the word ‘Asian’9 is used more
than ‘Pakistani’. This is not to hide any specific ethnic origin, but because
this was the description mainly used by the victims10 and in agency
case records. It is believed that when the term ‘Asian’ was used it did often
refer to those of Pakistani heritage, but ‘Asian’ seems to be the word used in
common professional parlance.

1.30 The victims were white
British girls.

4.25 Community relations: With the
known perpetrators of group CSE [child sexual exploitation] being significantly
of Pakistani heritage, there is considerable work to build relationships with
these communities (and others), increase their understanding of CSE and help
build a preventative approach. Some examples:

oThe Children’s Society runs 12-week induction
programmes for young unaccompanied asylum seekers, on which CSC [child sexual
contact] and the Police provide input on CSE and age of consent issues.

oThe City Council is appointing a Pakistani
Father Support project worker, and has developed a new mentoring programme to
prevent CSE amongst at risk BME/South Asian males.

oThe Superintendent in charge of the Oxford
Police (who also chairs the OSCB CSE subgroup) meets Mosque leaders every two
months, with for example discussions on CSE warning signs. In 2015 it is
planned to extend this to include the City and County Councils.

oThe Superintendent also has a bi-monthly Independent
Advisory Group which includes all faiths. CSE is always on the agenda, and the
Group is briefed for example on disruption operations.

oPolice officers attend the Mosque Friday Prayers
weekly.

oThe OSCB’s revised CSE strategy will have a
major new section on community engagement.

oThe Local Authority Designated Officer (LADO)
has led work with the Oxfordshire Mosques and their linked Madrassas on
safeguarding children and has worked to ensure safeguarding arrangements are in
place including DBS checks, basic training and a safeguarding policy.

oSeven faith leaders attended a top-level
briefing on CSE progress in September 2014.

oA meeting was held in February 2015 between
Police, City and County representatives and the OSCB Chair with Muslim
community leaders.

in August 2013, Aabidali Mubarak Ali, Rakib
Iacub, Hamza Imitiazali, Chandresh Mistry, Bharat Modhwadia and Wajud Usman,
all of Leicester – five Muslim and one Hindu – pleaded guilty to offences
against a sixteen-year-old girl;

in September 2013, Naeem Ahmed, Nabeel Ahmed and
Hassan Raza were sentenced in Snaresbrook Crown Court to fourteen, eight and
two years respectively for rape and/or sexual assault of an eighteen-year-old.
During a seven-week trial, six girls gave evidence about the three men. The
initial arrest was pursuant to investigations into the suspected abuse of two
girls in the care of Essex County Council;

in November 2013, Rochdale came up again:
Manchester Crown Court jailed Rufiq Abubaken a Kurd; Abdul Huk and Roheez Khan,
both of Pakistani heritage; and Chola Chansa and Freddie Kendakumana, both from
the Congo, for sexual activity with an underage girl (the jury failed to reach
a verdict as to Mohammed Ali and Asrar Haider);

in March 2014, the furore over the trial of Abid
Miskeen, aged thirty-two, of Bradford, was not over what he had done (he had
had intercourse with a girl who was then aged fourteen) but that his victim was
kept in custody overnight to ensure she gave evidence. The trial was delayed
for a few hours; the girl went outside for a smoke and disappeared. The judge
issued a warrant for her and three other witnesses. She was kept in a police
station overnight and for four hours the next day. The jury took less than two
hours to return a unanimous guilty verdict. Miskeen was sentenced to the
maximum possible, namely seven years. Miskeen, father of two, made the girl
pregnant. He had a string of previous convictions including robbery, assault
and dangerous driving. In 2012, he was given a community order for punching his
partner and was in breach of that order when he had intercourse with the girl;

in April 2014, Nazakat Mahmood, Ghulfaraz Nawaz,
Haroon Rauf and Omar Sharif – three of Chesham and one of Amersham – were
convicted of sexual activity with a girl who at the time was fourteen;

in July 2014, Mohammed Sadiq of Leeds was
convicted of sexual assault on a child a third of his age. His counsel, Zia
Chaudry, in mitigation, told the court that he continued to deny the offences.
He was sentenced to five years (with three years extended licence);

in July 2014, Matab Ali, Umber Farooq and Anees
Hanif of Burton-upon-Trent were sentenced to five and a half years for sexually
abusing a girl when she was between thirteen and fifteen, with Junaid Ali also being
jailed for attempted rape, and Ameer Arshad for blackmail;

in August 2014, there was published Professor
Jay’s Independent Inquiry into Child
Sexual Exploitation in Rotherham 1997–2013:

No one knows the true scale of
child sexual exploitation (CSE) in Rotherham over the years. Our conservative
estimate is that approximately 1,400 children were sexually exploited over the
full inquiry period, from 1997 to 2013.11.1

By far the majority of perpetrators
were described as ‘Asian’ by victims 11.2

in November 2014, Birmingham City Council
obtained an order that ten men should not approach in public places ‘any female
under 18’ with whom they were not personally associated, the names of six to be
identified namely Omar Ahmed, Shah Alam, Mohammed Amjan, Sajid Hussain,
Mohammed Javed and Naseem Khan;

in February 2015 there was published Report of Inspection of Rotherham
Metropolitan Borough Council by Louise Casey: this was at the instigation
of the government pursuant to the findings of the Jay Report

in March 2015, ten men of Blackley, Burnley,
Ilkeston, Prestwich, Rochdale and various prisons were charged with one or more
of rape, conspiracy to rape, sexual activity with a child, aiding and abetting
rape, assault occasioning actual bodily harm, between 2005 and 2013, at a time
when the eight victims were aged between thirteen and twenty-three. Assistant
Chief Constable Ian Wiggett said,

This investigation is one of a number of cases which comes
under the umbrella of Operation Doublet, which is the continued investigation
into Child Sexual Exploitation that arose following the 2011 investigation into
CSE in Rochdale … So far 65 people have been arrested as part of Operation
Doublet.

in July 2015, Asif Hussain, Mohammed Imran,
Arshad Jani, Akbari Khan, Taimoor Khan and Vikram Singh (four of Aylesbury and
one of each of Milton Keynes and Bradford) were convicted of sexual activity
with two girls of twelve or thirteen. Between the six of them, they were jailed
for a total of eight-two years. The prosecutor told the jury:

The scale of it is, you may agree, horrifying. [One of the
girls] estimated that she had sex with about 60 men – six zero – almost all
Asian.

(The trial was also of
five other men: four were found not guilty and the jury could not decide on the
eleventh.)

in August 2015, Bilal Ahmed, Dilon Rasul (who
came here from Iran in 2009) and Hassan Ali were convicted of offences relating
to two teenage girls and a teenage boy living in care homes in Rochdale; Jubair
Rahman had already pleaded guilty to child abduction;

in February 2016, Arshid Hussain and his
brothers Basharat and Bannaras, all of Rotherham, were convicted (and in the
third case at the eleventh hour admitted) between them of multiple counts of
rape, indecent assault, buggery, child abduction and false imprisonment against
eleven children, and their uncle Qurban Ali of conspiracy to rape. The evidence
of one girl, thirteen at the time, included:

There was a graveyard. When it was dark I’d be taken there by
Pakistani men. They were all a lot older than me. It got to the point where it
was a different man nearly every day. A Pakistani man would go with you a
couple of times and then pass you on to his friends. It was as though once
they’d used you and had sex with you they didn’t want to know.

DERBY

Derby is where men from Mirpur
(in Kashmir and see M isfor Mirpur) groomed, abused and raped teenage girls.

At the culmination of
Operation Retriever, through 2010, there were three split trials. The men
described as the ringleaders – Abid Mohammed Saddique and Mohammed Romaan Liaquat
– pleaded guilty to at least one of charges of rape, false imprisonment, sexual
assault, sexual activity with a child, perverting the course of justice and
aiding and abetting rape, and were both given indefinite prison sentences.
Others convicted of at least one of such crimes included Farooq Ahmed, Akshay
Kumar, Faisal Mehmood (subsequently deported to Pakistan), Mohammed Imran
Rehman and Liaquat’s brother, Nawed Liaquat.1

Derby turned out not to be a
one-off or the first. If no one else had known of this Asian threat, decades
before, the police did. Mick Gradwell, a former detective superintendent,
observed:

When I joined in 1979 one of my first tasks was to police
around a Blackburn nightclub where one of the issues was Asian men cruising
around in BMWs and Mercs trying to pick up young drunken girls.

But this Asian behaviour was
not confronted, immigration continued and

·in 2003, Charlene Downes disappeared, and Paige
Rivers in 2007. In 2012, a kebab shop in Blackpool was refused a hot food
licence;2

·in August 2008, the police attended the Balti
House in Heywood, Rochdale, and arrested a fifteen-year-old, who came to be
referred to as Girl A, on suspicion of causing criminal damage: she was
attempting to smash up the place. The reason for this, she told police, was
that she had been repeatedly plied with vodka and then raped. As a result,
Kabeer Hassan and Defendant X were arrested but, despite the latter’s DNA being
found on Girl A’s underwear, no prosecution followed.3 A new Chief
Crown Prosecutor for North West England, Nazir Afzal, re-examined the file and,
in December 2010, Defendant X and Kabeer Hassan were re-arrested, with nine
others to follow;

·on Saturday, 28 November 2009, Amar Hussain and
Shamrez Rashid took two girls, then aged sixteen and fifteen, from Telford to a
hostel in Birmingham, where they were joined by Amer Islam Choudhrey, Jahbar
Rafiq and Adel Saleem. To the five men, ‘It was Eid. We treated [the girls] as
our guests. OK so they gave us [sex] but we were buying them food and drink.’
Between them, the five men were convicted of rape, attempted rape, attempted
sexual assault and child abduction;

·in 2010, Mohammed Ditta and Mirza Baig, both of
Manchester, in their thirties and married, were jailed indefinitely for plying
three fifteen-year-olds with vodka, ecstasy and cocaine and then sexually
assaulting them;

·in 2010, Adil Hussain, Moshin Khan, Zafran
Ramzan, Umar Razaq and (his cousin) Razwan Razaq, (all) of Rotherham, were
jailed for grooming, in 2008, girls who at the time were aged twelve and
thirteen, and in one case of raping a sixteen-year-old;

Moving from criminals from
Asia to those from Africa, in November 2014, there could be reported the trial
in Bristol that ended in June with the conviction of Liban Abdi, Abdulahi Aden,
Mustafa Deria, Mustafa Farah, Arafar Osman, Idleh Osman and Said Zakaria (aged
between twenty and twenty-two). That publication was on the conviction of
Zakaria on further charges plus Jusuf Abdizirak, Abdirashid Abdulahi, Mohamed
Dahir, Mohamed Jumale, Omar Jumale and Sakariah Sheik (aged between twenty and
twenty-four). (Apart from drug dealing) the thirteen men abused, raped and
trafficked teenage girls. Apparently seven of the thirteen are British citizens
but all are of Somali ethnicity: Muna Abdi of the Bristol Somali Forum said, ‘I
am hoping people will look at this as a crime and not just a crime for the
Somali community. The community is deeply shocked and shaken.’